By: Laura Steiner
Flights carrying COVID19 positive passengers continue to arrive at Pearson Airport. A total of 24 planes landed over a five-day period between February 6, and 11, 2021.
Five flights arrived at the airport from destinations within Canada while two departed. 15 flights arrived from outside Canada, while 2 departed. According to government data, more than one row was affected on each flight. Passengers on each of the flights are asked to visit the following link where they can search their flight information. Flights with all rows listed in the column listed “affected rows” indicate multiple confirmed cases spread throughout the aircraft.
New travel restrictions include a requirement for incoming passengers to quarantine at hotels at their own expense beginning February 22. Travelers entering the country through the land border will need a COVID-19 test upon arrival beginning February 15, 2021.
Year: 2021
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COVID19 positive flights continue to arrive at Pearson
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Fast-growing Indigenous book club considered a success by Niagara organizer
By: Sean Vanderklis, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Niagara Falls Review
When Patty Krawec, an Indigenous activist and host of the Medicine for the Resistance podcast, responded to a request on Twitter about recommended reading for people who wanted to better understand issues affecting Indigenous people, she didn’t realize how big the demand was.
Krawec created a thread on books individuals should read throughout the year.
She organized them by month, and included a theme that brought it all together.
“I turned my response into a Twitter thread, recommending different books for every month, and grouped them into themes,” said Krawec.
“That received a lot of attention on Twitter so I said, hey, would you guys be interested in a book club based around these books?”
The response was massive.
Krawec quickly registered more than 100 people who agreed to meet monthly.
As word spread online and the signup sheet increased, she identified her next obstacle: How could she accommodate and facilitate a conversation of that size?
She elected to hold panel discussions.
“That is too many for a conversation,” she said. “You can’t have any kind of coherent conversation with that many people. So then I switched the format to the panel discussion.”
The discussions, to be held monthly, are entitled “Ambe.”
Krawec said Ambe is an Anishinaabe word that loosely translates to “Let’s go.”
Despite the book club’s success, the overall intent never changed.
Krawec was adamant the exercise is about how individuals can move forward, relationship-wise but in a good way.
“What have we learned from history, of being good relatives to each other, about being human?” she wondered. “Indigenous people and non-Indigenous people are stuck living together in this place — how can we be good neighbours?”
With her intent clearly defined, Krawec held her first discussion in January livestreamed on the Twitch platform.
She said her first panel’s composition involved a “mixed bag of authors, academics and book club participants.”
The featured book was, “Why Indigenous Literatures Matter,” by Daniel Heath Justice.
Krawec said, “It provides an overview of a range of Indigenous lit that is a good foundation and will set participants up for the next 11 months.”
Ambe is scheduled to make 11 more appearances online, and as people continue to register Krawec said she is excited to explore more complex topics.
For information on the book club, visit Krawec’s website: daanis.ca/ambe/
Sean Vanderklis is a Niagara-based reporter for the Niagara Falls Review. His reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative. Reach him via email: svanderklis@metroland.com -
Pandemic making us more comfortable talking about mental health
At a time when COVID-19 has wreaked havoc on so many lives, its impact on mental health is well documented, and many of us are starting to talk about it more.
In fact, Canadians are now increasingly likely to disclose a mental illness, with three quarters indicating they would either comfortably or reluctantly disclose it, according to a recent survey from RBC Insurance. The survey also shows that half of us view depression and anxiety as a disability.
However, the findings reveal that having personal experience with disability plays an important role. Those who have taken time off for a disability – whether for themselves or for someone they know – are more likely to feel completely comfortable admitting to mental health struggles. However, among those who have no personal experience with disability at all, this number drops.
“Canadians who have seen the impact that disabilities can have on the lives of those around them better understand the seriousness of mental illness, and the fact that they are more willing to communicate openly will hopefully set a positive example for others moving forward,” says Maria Winslow, senior director of life and health at RBC Insurance.
A personal history with mental health also affects attitudes about disability insurance, which provides money that can replace lost income if someone needs to take time off.
Furthermore, a quarter of respondents agree that buying personal disability coverage is more important to them since the pandemic, while one in five say they are more likely to purchase coverage that can protect them from the risk of financial hardship.
Early intervention is critical when dealing with mental illnesses so check with your benefits provider for programs that offer rapid access to psychologists, and options for telemedicine or digital tools that can be used from the privacy and comfort of home. -
Conservation Halton President to Chair ‘working group’ committee on Environmental Policy
By: Pam Wright, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Herald
When it comes to shaping Ontario’s environmental policies, Southwestern Ontario has been left out in the cold.
A new 18-member ‘working group’ committee — struck after the province gutted the powers of local conservation authorities last December — is supposed to provide input as to how the province will incorporate the sweeping changes.
With the exception of one officer from Grand River Conservation Authority, there’s no representation west of the Kitchener-Waterloo area .
But there is, however, representation from three Toronto area developers. One, called Mattamy Homes, made a $100,000 donation to Ontario Proud in 2018.
According to Election Ontario records, Ontario Proud is a political advocacy group that was instrumental in getting Doug Ford elected as premier.
West Elgin deputy mayor Richard Leatham is hot under the collar about the lack of local voices on the committee.
As a Lower Thames Valley Conservation Authority executive member and director, Leatham says shutting out Southwestern Ontario is “ridiculous.”
Leatham says rural residents are being ignored, their opinions discounted.
“Are we just rural people that they think don’t know anything?” Leatham asks. “It’s incredible.
“It’s very difficult to understand how people can make good judgements when they are not from this area,” Leatham adds.
The Rodney resident isn’t alone. South Chatham-Kent councillor Trevor Thompson, who is vice-chair of the LTVCA, says it’s “frustrating to the LTVCA left without a voice.”
For decades, he says, successive governments act like the province ends at London.
Thompson says Chatham-Kent is facing some unique pressures with flooding and erosion, wetland protection and phosphorus reduction, unlike other areas in Ontario.
“To not be able to add to the conversation I think limits the effectiveness of the whole process,” he adds.
North Chatham-Kent councillor Joe Faas is also upset by the omission.
As a member of the St. Clair Conservation Authority board, Faas thinks representation on the committee should be more balanced.
“I think they should have done more to make it evenly distributed,” Faas says, adding the all the watersheds across a huge swath of the province all have their unique challenges.
“Every conservation authority and every area has different issues,” he says, adding it looks like the new committee is catering to Toronto.
“There’s more to Ontario than that area,” he says. “We should have definitely had some representation from our area.”
Critics of the newly formed committee — which critics say was thrown together to in an attempt to appease outrage over the changes — contend the group is in danger of neglecting some of the Great Lakes most important watersheds.
The conservation authority changes were pushed through the Ontario legislature as part of an omnibus bill on Dec. 8.
Conservation authority officials say they were blindsided by the government’s decision.
There are number of big changes in the wings for conservation authorities, including the clarification of mandatory programs vs. non-mandatory programs, defining watercourses and wetlands and how determining how development should take place in those areas, as well as how conservation authorities should levy the municipalities they represent.
Conservation Halton president Hassaan Basit has been chosen to chair the group that will develop new regulations.
Calls to Environment, Conservation and Parks Minister Jeff Yurek, MPP for Elgin-Middlesex-London, were unanswered as of press time. -
Virtual Program Connects newcomer high school students
By: Rachel Collier, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Eastern Graphic
High school students new to English and to rural PEI have the opportunity to connect through redesigned virtual English language classes.
“It’s connecting rural PEI,” said EAL (English as an Additional Language) program director, Janet Perry-Payne. Through the virtual class students from across the Island have the opportunity to join a teacher online to learn English together.
“If I’m from a different country and I go to Montague, I may not know the other kids who don’t look the same as I do or talk the same language. Now, all of a sudden there is another world opened up,” Ms Perry-Payne explained.
Teacher Stephanie MacNeill spearheaded the move to offer virtual courses alongside Ms Perry-Payne.
Ms MacNeill said students who have moved to different areas of PEI from the same country light up when they meet each other through the virtual class.
“They are able to have a conversation they wouldn’t necessarily have with other students like, ‘what exact city are you from?’” she said.
Ms MacNeill has seen students appreciate opportunities to express with peers in their first language. The students have also helped each other learn the local lay of the land by talking about everything from local sporting events to the school lunch program.
“I think meeting through this class helps new students adjust and settle in.”
This is the first school year the English as an Additional Language courses have been offered through a combination of virtual and in-person teaching on PEI.
Aside from creating a hub for students to meet, the virtual learning component has increased rural students’ access to courses and in-person teaching.
The Island program set out for high school students new to English includes two language courses. One focuses on writing and reading, the other on conversation. Both are intended to be led by a teacher every day.
“For years this hasn’t been happening at rural schools,” Ms Perry-Payne said.
Last semester, 10 Westisle Composite High School students enrolled in EAL, four or five enrolled from Montague, two from Souris and one from Kensington.
Because of the small number of EAL students spread across rural PEI, a teacher would travel to offer one course at each school every second day.
“We’ve been feeling bad about this for many years and talking about, is there a way we could go virtual?”
Obstacles with technology always seemed to pop up.
When COVID-19 hit and there was a push to enable comprehensive online learning options, the conversation changed.
“We started saying, ‘Gosh, we could really make this work,’” Ms Perry-Payne said.
Ms MacNeill had a handle on the available technology and was determined to succeed.
She set out continuing to meet students in-person on a rotating schedule and invited students from all the other schools to join the classes virtually.
“It takes a bit of juggling,” Ms MacNeill said.
But students caught on quickly and now they are able to access both recommended courses daily.
Ms Perry-Payne said this increased opportunity to learn is important for students’ well-being.
“When you don’t know a language you are vulnerable. Language is used to interpret everything around you so it’s so important for these students to have a good chance to learn.”
She added the trusting and personable relationships students were able to build with their teacher and peers re-affirmed this model could continue to be successful in the future.
“Good learning has happened here,” Ms Perry-Payne said.
This semester an additional teacher has been added to offer the classes and students from Colonel Gray, Three Oaks and Morell will join the online classes.
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Shots fired at westbound 401 ONroute in Cambridge
By: Swikar Oli, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Cambridge Times
O.P.P. highway safety and Waterloo regional police are investigating reports of shots fired at the westbound 401 ONroute service centre in Cambridge.
Officers were called to the area at around 6:45 p.m. on Feb. 12, said O.P.P. media relations officer and Sergeant Kerry Schmidt in a live video posted to Twitter. O. P. P. arrived at the scene, where they arrested a male suspect, he said.
No injuries were reported to the witnesses or the suspect, Schmidt noted.
Police still don’t have a clear understanding as to any motive, he said.
“With the assistance of the Waterloo Regional police with their tactical units, they … assisted the O.P.P. with the investigation [and] clearing the building.”
Schmidt added there is no risk to public safety at this time.
“Obviously a very frightening experience when shots are fired within a public space.”
The ONroute location is closed “for most of the evening,” Schmidt noted. Forensic crime units were performing an investigation at the scene, he said.
Any one who was at that property who has information related to the case is asked to call 1-888-310-1122. -
Everyone who wants a vaccine will get one by end of September, Trudeau says
By: Levon Sevunts
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday reiterated his pledge that every Canadian who wants to get a COVID-19 vaccine will get one by the end September, just as a new poll shows growing dissatisfaction with his government’s handling of the vaccine rollout.
Speaking at his regular COVID-19 briefing in Ottawa, Trudeau said he has been assured by Pfizer that the pharmaceutical giant will fulfil its promise to deliver four million doses of its Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine by the end of March.
Furthermore, Pfizer will accelerate the delivery of its vaccine to Canada and ship a further 10.8 million doses ahead of schedule between April and June, and all of the remaining doses of Canada’s 40-million total order by the end of September, Trudeau said.
“That is part of the reason why we can say with such confidence that everyone who wants a vaccine in Canada, will get one by the end of September,” Trudeau said. “We’ve been continuing to work every single day on getting as many doses as possible as quickly as possible into Canadians’ arms.”
In addition, the federal government has purchased four million additional doses of the Moderna vaccine which will be arriving over the summer, Trudeau added.
In all, Canada will get 84 million doses of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines by the end of September, the prime minister said.
Trudeau also announced that new quarantine measures forcing air travellers to stay at their own expense at government-approved hotels for mandatory quarantine after arriving in Canada will come into effect on Feb. 22.
Last month, the government signalled air travellers returning from non-essential trips abroad will have to isolate in a federally mandated facility for up to 72 hours while they await the results of a polymerase chain reaction test, commonly known as a PCR test. Trudeau has estimated the potential cost of the three-day quarantine hotel stay at $2,000.
In addition, non-essential travelers arriving in Canada through its land border with the U.S. will also require to show a negative PCR test administerd within 72 hours of arriving at the border, Trudeau said.
“These border measures will help stop the spread of COVID-19 and new variants,” he said.Growing dissatisfaction: poll
Trudeau’s announcement on the vaccines and the new quarantine measures come as nearly six-in-ten Canadians (57 per cent) say the Liberal government has done a poor job of securing COVID-19 vaccine doses for the population, according to the latest poll by the non-profit Angus Reid Institute.
Even more worrying for Trudeau, the number of people who are dissatisfied by his government’s handling of the vaccine rollout has nearly tripled since early December when it stood at 23 per cent.
And just over a quarter of Canadians believe the prime minister’s promise that anyone who wants a vaccine will get one by September.
The Trudeau government has been under fire for the slow rollout of vaccines even though Canada has theoretically secured more vaccines per capita than any other country in the world and was one of the first countries to give regulatory approval to Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.
But Canada’s vaccination rollout hit a snag in mid-January when Pfizer-BioNTech announced it would cut deliveries to Canada by two-thirds between Jan. 18 and Feb. 14 while it was upgrading its production capabilities at its plant in Belgium. Then Moderna announced that it was forced to reduce last week’s shipment by 20 per cent because of production problems at its European facilities.
No other vaccine has been approved in Canada yet.
Health Canada is reviewing two separate applications for approval of the vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University researchers, including a joint pitch from the Serum Institute of India (SII), a private enterprise in Pune in western India.
Canada has administered just over 1.4 million vaccine shots or about 3.1 doses per 100 people since the first doses of Pfizer-BioNTech and then Moderna vaccines were delivered in mid-December.
In the meantime, as of Feb. 11, the U.K. had administered 20 doses per 100 people, while the U.S. rate was approximately 13 doses per 100. Canada compares more favourably with France (3.5 doses per 100) and the Netherlands (2.7) on this scale.
When shown Canada’s progress in vaccinating its population compared to the U.S., U.K., France and Netherlands, 59 per cent of Angus Reid poll respondents said that Canada should be performing better than or at least as well as other nations in the amount of vaccines it has administered. The rest were more sympathetic to the plight of Canadian officials in charge of procurement and were of the view that recent setbacks have been out of anyone’s control, the poll shows. -
Halton CMOH Issues additional instructions to businesses
By: Laura Steiner
Halton Region is moving to the red designation as of February 16, 2021. Chief Medical Officer of health (CMOH) Dr. Hamidah Meghani has issued additional instructions to businesses that are set to reopen.
Effective Tuesday, shopping malls and retail stores will have to follow four new rules- Comply with all requirements specific to the business as set out under the Reopening Ontario Act (ROA)
- Actively monitor compliance with required capacity limits, ensure physical distancing of 2m is maintained by patrons, store staff, and mall staff in all common areas, stores, washrooms etc.. and that mask or face coverings are worn in a manner that protects the mouth, nose, and chin unless entitled to an exemption
- Actively manage all lineups including patrons waiting outside, or inside the shopping mall
The new instructions also apply to retail stores within shopping malls. For a full list of instructions are available here
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A Secret History revealed in new Wild West TV Series
By: By David Owen Rama, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Windspeaker.com
Source: Windspeaker.com
Many of us know that history is often skewed in favour of those who control the message, initially beginning with government accounts, historical texts and newspapers.
As the 20th century unfolded, new electronic forms of media such as film, radio, and television became incredibly useful tools to glorify the colonizer’s agenda while undermining the historical legacy of the First Nations people.
The demonization and stereotyping of Indigenous people disseminated in cowboy stories and popular western movies and TV shows became insidious.
In the new series Secret History: The Wild West, actor, writer, producer, director and showrunner Julian Black Antelope aims to set the record straight.
Premiering on Feb. 13 on the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN), the 13-part docudrama is a labour of love for Black Antelope who has built himself an impressive career taking on acting roles in such productions as Penny Dreadful, Blackstone and Tribal.
“When I grew up here in southern Alberta in the small community of Fort McLeod, Blackfoot culture was all around me. I grew up with Blackfoot culture. That’s the only culture I knew,” he said.
“But I never really heard much about these characters from our history being taught in our school and I always wondered why. Because we live in such a rich part of western Canada and this is our Wild West out here, and yet very few people are aware of the Indigenous people that helped shape this area that we live in today,” he went on to explain.
Motivated by his struggles as an Indigenous actor to find roles that didn’t play into common stereotypes, Black Antelope spent a number of years writing, researching and pitching the Wild West through his production company Herd of 1 Media to potential backers until he finally received the green light from APTN.
“It was very important for me to develop something that young Indigenous people could say ‘hey, that’s one of us. Those are our superheroes. This is who I want to model myself after. I want to learn more about this guy’,” says Black Antelope.
Comprised of dramatic re-enactments, speaker testimony, animation and archive photos, Secret History: The Wild West “unearths” the past to bring much deserved attention to First Nations, Métis, and Inuit icons left out of the history books and challenge the accepted cannon of western stories.
Secret History: The Wild West will serve to tell the compelling stories of larger than life Indigenous figures from western history who achieved great accomplishments even in the face of harsh oppression and a genocidal initiative on the part of the colonists.
Told from an Indigenous perspective, the series is “anchored by testimony from direct descendants, spiritual leaders and tribal Elders of both Siksikaitsitapi (Blackfoot) and Nehiyaw-Pwat (Cree)” confederacies.
Season 1 of the show will present half-hour installments examining the lives of Indigenous heroes such as Swift Runner, Low Horn, Big Bear, Calf Shirt, Louis Riel, Red Crow, Tom Three Person, Thunder Chief, and many others.
The series is built on a foundation of testimonials and accounts by numerous Indigenous Elders that include historian and spiritual leader Jerry Potts (Piikuni), artist, historian, and consultant Kerry Scott (Kainai), and Blackfoot language advisor and spiritual and cultural expert Rod Scout (Siksika).
Secret History: The Wild West was shot in English and Blackfoot language versions. When asked about the challenges of translating his teleplay from English into Blackfoot, Black Antelope admits that “it was definitely a challenge, but something well worth it because it was a way of archiving the language.
“We try to stay true to form as possible using very fluent speakers, very knowledgeable people,” explained Blackfoot consultant Scout, who grew up speaking the Blackfoot language taught to him by his grandparents. A Horn Society member and singer, Scout is a wellspring of traditional and historical insights who shares his vast knowledge generously in conversation.
As a lifelong knowledge keeper, Scout wants to make it clear that “a lot of us aren’t smart Elders for nothing. Like we just get old and suddenly we get to be an Elder. We all paid our dues. We’re members of societies and we own the bundles.”
Series speaker and consultant Kerry Scott met Black Antelope earlier in his career when the actor was working on his first television series, Into The West, a dramatic historical mini-series produced in 2005 by Steven Spielberg’s Dreamworks Studios.
Scott teases over the phone with intriguing stories about the complex and rich cultural history of the Blackfoot Confederacy that spans areas of southern Alberta, Saskatchewan and central Montana.
A residential school survivor, Scott worked extensively in rodeo until the age of 43 when he decided to return to school where he went back and covered requirements for both junior high and high school before enrolling in university where he earned both a Bachelor’s and a Master’s degree.
For his Master’s thesis Scott wrote a lengthy and detailed account of the Blackfoot culture viewed as a “living entity” called A Contemporary Winter Count in conjunction with a substantial series of his own paintings that interpret historical accounts contained in detailed sacred symbols.
While Scott says that if he gets around to it he probably has “at least 10 more books” in him, series advisor Scout cynically jokes that after being turned down for a teaching job back in the day because of a lack of academic credentials, he was forced to pursue his PhD just so he would be legitimately recognized to educate others about a culture that he was born and raised in.
Both Elders speak at length about nefarious genocidal tactics employed by the government, the clergy, and other intruders. They speak of the intentional destruction of the buffalo herds, biological warfare with the intentional spread of smallpox and tuberculosis, and the distribution of tainted alcohol, as well as disturbing accounts of segregation and oppression under the Pass System as dictated under the Indian Act. It was a system studied and adopted by Apartheid South Africa.
A retired police and security officer himself, Scout tells how Mounties would target Indigenous people and then also act as prosecuting attorneys at their trials, basically stacking the deck against them.
Scott exposes controversial evidence in the series providing historical proof of the intentional tainting of the alcohol supply with the powerful opioid Laudanum, which he says was used to kill and control Indigenous people, and mirrors the historically recognized trade in opium by the British to gain economic control over the people of China.
Not comfortable with taking on the role of the stiff serious documentary presenter, Black Antelope wavered when asked to step up as the narrator of the series. As he was already wearing numerous hats on the project, Black Antelope was seeking something inspiring that would allow him to show off his acting chops. That’s when he was hit with an appealing idea.
“And then I thought, ‘I know, I could be the Trickster. Because then I could morph into anything’,” said Black Antelope. “I’d be able to use my acting skills and I’d be playing characters. It brings out a mischievous element to it as well because it’s almost like you’re saying ‘hey, you know, you didn’t want this history to be known, but we’re going do it anyway’.”
“There’s some stuff (in the series) that’s going to probably make a non-Indigenous viewer uncomfortable,” the actor explained. “So the Trickster is there to let the pressure off a little bit and lighten the moment.”
As the original creator of Secret History: The Wild West, Black Antelope is thrilled that the show has been picked up for a second season as he and his team of consultants are excited to turn the focus next on important Indigenous women figures who played prominent roles in western history.
“My intent behind the show is to bridge those gaps in our history, and also to show our flaws. Because we’re flawed too. We all have problems and this is what’s happened. So let’s be aware of this so it never happens again and let’s move forward collectively. And if we understand a little bit more about each other’s cultures, I think there would be a little less animosity and division.”
Secret History: The Wild West premieres Feb. 13 at 7:30 p.m. ET on APTN.
To find out more about the series and showtimes go to www.aptn.ca/secrethistory
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Newfoundland and Labrador on full lockdown after arrival of COVID-19 variant
By: Peter Jackson, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Telegram
Newfoundland and Labrador has reverted to Alert Level 5, the most stringent lockdown in the government’s alert system, after news arrived late Friday that a highly transmissible variant of the COVID-19 vaccine is behind the spike in the St. John’s region.
Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Janice Fitzgerald said in an emergency Friday night briefing that the variant — one of three that have shown up elsewhere in Canada over the past couple of months — is highly contagious, and health officials need to act quickly to trace and contain the spread.
Until Friday, only the St. John’s region was under strict pandemic special measures following a week that saw about 200 cases.
Premier Andrew Furey said he spoke with Prime Minister moments before the briefing, and that they discussed various ways the province could support the province in its battle against the virus.
He did not specify what form that support would take.
The provincial election was supposed to happen in all areas of the province outside of the St. John’s metro area Saturday.
After avoiding local media for most of the day, Chief Electoral Officer Bruce Chaulk iappeared on national broadcast news to say the election was off,
He later issued a statement locally saying voters will now have to vote by mail,
Ebb and flow
The daily COVID-19 case count dropped by half Friday to 50 cases, but health officials say the one-day decrease means nothing in the bigger picture.
Minister of Health Dr. John Haggie warned it’s more important to keep an eye on the longer trend.
“One of the challenges with this virus is that the case numbers ebb and flow from day to day and I would hate for anyone to assume that simply because today’s numbers are lower than yesterday, that anything could be or should be read into that,” Haggie said during Friday afternoon’s video briefing to the province.
The St. John’s metro area — encompassing the entire northeast Avalon Peninsula — has been on lockdown since Wednesday after dozens of new cases starting showing up earlier in the week,
The epicentre appears to be Mount Pearl Senior High, where Eastern Health staff have been conducting extensive testing in the parking lot most of the week, sometimes in snow in wind.
Dr. Janice Fitzgerald said fewer cases Friday only means that the focus of testing has shifted over the last few days.
“Our testing in the beginning phases were focused on that high school and the students in that high school,” she said. “We expected to find a lot of cases there. Now we’re moving away from that and we’re testing in other areas so we’re not finding quite as many.”
However, she said the incubation period for the virus is usually five to seven days, so whole new clusters of cases may spring up over the weekend.
Beyond the Avalon
Fitzgerald said a few unlinked cases have shown up in other parts of the Avalon Peninsula, as well in the Central region of Newfoundland, which logged three of Friday’s case tally.
She said the source of the cases in that region have still not been traced.
“We’re certainly concerned that we could be seeing some cases popping up elsewhere, however we don’t have confirmation that that is the case at this point,” she said.
However, she was quite clear on why case counts for each region are not broken down further into specific communities.
“There are lots of places that are very small, so sometimes it’s easy to know who case might be just because of where they’re from,” she said.
“At this point, you need to assume that COVID is around you” she added sternly. “It doesn’t matter where it looks like it is on a map. Assume it’s there. Do what needs to be done. Knowing that it’s in place A or place B is not going to protect you any more than doing all the things that you need to do to protect yourself and your loved ones. So that’s what you need to do and not worry about what’s on a map.”
Visitors banned
Meanwhile, Fitzgerald imposed stricter measures on long-term and personal care homes in the province, where guidelines had been dictated two designated visitors per resident.
Now, visitation is restricted only to those who are deemed essential for the health and care of the residents.
I hope these measures will be short-lived to minimize the negative consequences, but I feel it is important to do it at this time.”
Many care home residents have already received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, but Fitzgerald said that plays no role in the decision because not enough is known about virus transmissibility after vaccination.
Avoid 811
Although resources have been boosted for the province’s healthline, 811, Fitzgerald and Haggie implored people to use the online assessment tool (https://www.811healthline.ca/covid-19-self-assessment/) to arrange testing.
The wait time for callbacks can now take up to three days, as can the wait for test results. Those awaiting tests are also asked to check for them online unless they have no Internet access or valid MCP number.
As of Friday, Haggie said 300 health care workers in the province were under quarantine or in isolation. More than two-thirds of those are with Eastern Health.
Fitzgerald admitted the number of public alerts and special measure orders may be confusing for many, and offered some simple advice.
“For now, if in doubt as to whether you have been exposed to COVID, the safest thing for you to do is self-isolate and to listen to public health advice,” she said.